Try using some tin oxide on it... Also polish using with diamonds only also works and than burnishing with a maintenannce pad like the monkey pads
What about Dia-Glow powder?Sent via BlackBerry® from TelstraFrom: stuart rosen <mail@stoneshine.com>Sender: rosen.stuart@gmail.comDate: Fri, 6 Jan 2012 19:46:17 -0600To: Restoration and Maintenance<sccpartners@stoneandtilepros.com>ReplyTo: "Restoration and Maintenance" <sccpartners@stoneandtilepros.com>Subject: RE: [sccpartners] Brown ForestMikeRainforest brown-a serpentinite and hard to polish. We take it up high with diamonds then crystallize or use MB-20.(MB-20 works nice on this)Have you already polished it-(2nd pic). In the states lots of folks use it as kitchen counter tops-pretty resilient too.Don't know much about vmc products but sounds like another type of crystallizer.On Fri, Jan 6, 2012 at 6:24 PM, Mike Marsoun <nulifesc@bigpond.com> wrote:
These people want a better polished finish. This was 3 feet under water in the Brisbane floods 9 months ago, led to some micro spalling. Need to bring it up somehow. Has sanded grout (as usual) so a big grind is not an option. Would like to fill the pores somehow. Does anyone know the composition of this stone, it is very different, not dense at all. Something like the VMC product V3 maybe?
--
Powered by http://DiscussThis.com
Visit list archives, subscribe, unsubscribe or change your subscription preferences:
http://www.discussthis.com/members/sccpartners@stoneandtilepros.com
Start a new conversation (thread): sccpartners@stoneandtilepros.com
--
Powered by http://DiscussThis.com
Visit list archives, subscribe, unsubscribe or change your subscription preferences
Start a new conversation (thread)
Powered by http://DiscussThis.com
Visit list archives, subscribe, unsubscribe or change your subscription preferences
Start a new conversation (thread)